Pope Francis’ ecclesiology rooted in the Emmaus story

Pope Francis’ ecclesiology rooted in the Emmaus story

Thomas Reese | Aug. 6, 2013

Analysis

During his July 22-29 visit to Brazil, Pope Francis’ homilies and addresses had a simplicity and directness that inspired the faithful with confidence in God’s love, hope for reform and love of neighbor, especially the poor. But two of his speeches went beyond pastoral exhortations to lay out his vision and agenda for the church — his July 27 address to the Brazilian bishops and his address the next day to the episcopal council of CELAM, the Latin American conference of bishops.

Where does Francis want to lead the church? What does he want the bishops to do?

Church as reconciler: In his address to the Brazilian bishops, Francis retells the story of the Madonna of Aparecida as a parable of the Latin American church. Tired fishermen, who have experienced failure in a dilapidated boat with old, torn nets, find a broken statue that must be mended. “In Aparecida, from the beginning, God’s message was one of restoring what was broken, reuniting what had been divided,” Francis explained. “Walls, chasms, differences which still exist today are destined to disappear. The church cannot neglect this lesson: She is called to be a means of reconciliation.”

Church of the heart: For Francis, faith enters the church through the heart of the poor, not through the heads of intellectuals. Francis confessed that “perhaps we have reduced our way of speaking about mystery to rational explanations, but for ordinary people the mystery enters through the heart.” This leads him to understand the missionary role of the church not as winning an argument but as offering something beautiful. “Only the beauty of God can attract. God’s way is through enticement, allure,” he told the bishops. “He reawakens in us a desire to call our neighbors in order to make known his beauty. Mission is born precisely from this divine allure, by this amazement born of encounter.”

A church with a simple message: Francis concluded, “The results of our pastoral work do not depend on a wealth of resources, but on the creativity of love.” He argued that the message should be kept simple. “At times we lose people because they don’t understand what we are saying, because we have forgotten the language of simplicity and import an intellectualism foreign to our people.” This church does not obsess over whether Jesus is “one in being” or “consubstantial” with the Father. Rather, it presents Jesus as the compassion of God.

Church of Emmaus: Using the Gospel story of Emmaus, Francis talked to the bishops about people who have left the church because they “now think that the church — their Jerusalem — can no longer offer them anything meaningful and important.” He does not blame the culture, he does not harangue against relativism, consumerism and other “isms”; rather, he calls for self-examination by the bishops.

Perhaps the church appeared too weak, perhaps too distant from their needs, perhaps too poor to respond to their concerns, perhaps too cold, perhaps too caught up with itself, perhaps a prisoner of its own rigid formulas, perhaps the world seems to have made the church a relic of the past, unfit for new questions; perhaps the church could speak to people in their infancy but not to those come of age.

Faced with this Emmaus situation, what does Francis suggest?

We need a church unafraid of going forth into their night. We need a church capable of meeting them on their way. We need a church capable of entering into their conversation. We need a church able to dialogue with those disciples who, having left Jerusalem behind, are wandering aimlessly, alone, with their own disappointment, disillusioned by a Christianity now considered barren, fruitless soil, incapable of generating meaning. …

Are we still a church capable of warming hearts? A church capable of leading people back to Jerusalem? Of bringing them home? Jerusalem is where our roots are: Scripture, catechesis, sacraments, community, friendship with the Lord, Mary and the apostles. … Are we still able to speak of these roots in a way that will revive a sense of wonder at their beauty?

Francis then presented practical challenges for the Brazilian (and other) bishops that follow from this ecclesiology:

* “Unless we train ministers capable of warming people’s hearts, of walking with them in the night, of dialoguing with their hopes and disappointments, of mending their brokenness, what hope can we have for our present and future journey?”

* “There is need, then, for a greater appreciation of local and regional elements. Central bureaucracy is not sufficient; there is also a need for increased collegiality and solidarity.” What is needed is “not unanimity, but true unity in the richness of diversity.”

* The church’s legacy is transmitted through witness, and “one needs to hand it over personally, to touch the one to whom one wants to give, to relay, this inheritance.”

* “We need a church capable of rediscovering the maternal womb of mercy. Without mercy we have little chance nowadays of becoming part of a world of ‘wounded’ persons in need of understanding, forgiveness, love.”

* “Let us not reduce the involvement of women in the church, but instead promote their active role in the ecclesial community. By losing women, the church risks becoming sterile.”

In speaking to the coordinating committee of CELAM, Francis continued to flesh out his agenda for the bishops.

* “Do we see to it that our work, and that of our priests, is more pastoral than administrative?”

* “Are we creating a proactive mindset? Do we promote opportunities and possibilities to manifest God’s mercy?”

* “Do we make the lay faithful sharers in the mission?”

* Do diocesan and parish councils, “whether pastoral or financial, provide real opportunities for laypeople to participate in pastoral consultation, organization and planning?”

* Do we give the laity “the freedom to continue discerning, in a way befitting their growth as disciples, the mission which the Lord has entrusted to them? Do we support them and accompany them, overcoming the temptation to manipulate them or infantilize them?”

The center is Jesus Christ. Missionary discipleship does not allow for self-absorption or self-centeredness. “Either it points to Jesus Christ or it points to the people to whom he must be proclaimed,” Francis said. Neither the missionary nor the church is the “center,” he proclaimed. “The center is Jesus Christ, who calls us and sends us forth.” When the church “makes herself the ‘center,’ she becomes merely functional, and slowly but surely turns into a kind of NGO.”

With his usual humility, Pope Francis acknowledged that he and the bishops are lagging in what he calls “pastoral conversion” and could do better. He sets a high standard to which he and other bishops should aspire.

Bishops must be pastors, close to people, fathers and brothers, and gentle, patient and merciful. Men who love poverty, both interior poverty, as freedom before the Lord, and exterior poverty, as simplicity and austerity of life. Men who do not think and behave like “princes.” Men who are not ambitious, who are married to one church without having their eyes on another. Men capable of watching over the flock entrusted to them and protecting everything that keeps it together, guarding their people out of concern for the dangers which could threaten them, but above all instilling hope, so that light will shine in people’s hearts. Men capable of supporting with love and patience God’s dealings with his people. The bishop has to be among his people in three ways: in front of them, pointing the way; among them, keeping them together and preventing them from being scattered; and behind them, ensuring that no one is left behind, but also, and primarily, so that the flock itself can sniff out new paths.

It is clear from this description that Francis will make pastoral qualities a high priority in the selection of new bishops. If he is successful in finding such bishops, a new style of leadership will spread from Rome throughout the Catholic world.

Archive of Older Posts

Current Newsletter

Online Donations

This week we invite you to pray for the ministry of…

The National Baptist Convention of America, Incorporated (NBCA), is a fellowship of voluntary churches approximating one and half million African-American Baptists whose initial roots stemmed from the organization of the Foreign Mission Baptist Convention of the United States.

The focus of the NBCA, since its inception and prior to its incorporation status, has been upon education, missions (home and abroad) and the publication and circulation of religious literature.

The NBCA ministries as the convention has committed itself to the implementation Christ's Great Commission beyond the confines of the local churches to the community where children of the family of God reside.